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How a Decade of Neglect Led to Hobart's North Street Renaissance

A neighbourhood in decline sparked residents and business owners to ask hard questions about what went wrong—and how to fix it.

By Tasmania News Desk · Published 29 June 2026 at 11:05 pm

3 min read

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Ten years ago, North Street in Hobart's inner north was a study in urban decay. Boarded-up shopfronts stretched between the old Empire Theatre and the former Cascade brewery precinct. Property values had flatlined. The street, once a thriving commercial hub in the 1990s, had lost its identity as younger residents and businesses migrated to Salamanca and the waterfront.

"Nobody wanted to invest here," says a local business improvement group spokesperson. "Foot traffic had dropped 60 per cent since 2006. We had three pubs, but they were struggling. Retail vacancies topped 40 per cent by 2015."

Understanding how North Street deteriorated requires looking back at decisions made decades earlier. In the early 2000s, as Hobart's CBD shifted eastward toward the waterfront and Elizabeth Street precincts, the city council's investment followed suit. Council budgets for streetscape upgrades favored Salamanca Place and the waterfront precinct, leaving North Street with aging infrastructure, dim street lighting, and minimal foot traffic generation initiatives.

The shift accelerated with the 2008 financial crisis. Small retailers who had operated along North Street for 20-30 years couldn't sustain rent increases or found themselves priced out by landlords expecting waterfront-level returns. By 2012, average rents on North Street had nearly doubled from 2005 levels, yet the precinct lacked the foot traffic to justify those prices.

Compounding matters, the anticipated redevelopment of the Cascade brewery site—announced in 2009 with promises of revitalization—stalled through successive planning reviews. For over a decade, residents watched empty heritage buildings deteriorate while proposals languished in council committees.

The turning point came in 2023 when three factors converged: new council leadership committed to neighbourhood equity, the arrival of creative industries seeking affordable space, and a grassroots petition from residents demanding better street lighting and public realm investment.

What followed was the first coordinated intervention in years. Council allocated $2.4 million for streetscape improvements, approved fast-track development applications, and relaxed restrictions on temporary creative uses. By 2025, art galleries occupied three previously empty spaces. A specialty coffee roastery opened. Live music venues returned.

North Street's revival isn't complete, but it reflects how sustained neglect—rooted in policy decisions, market forces, and postponed investments—can hollow out neighbourhoods. The current rebuilding represents not just commercial recovery, but an acknowledgment that community resilience requires deliberate, equitable attention.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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